Emotional Intelligence Case Studies
Roger
Roger is a very senior executive
who has been rewarded throughout his career for being a
tough negotiator and ‘can do’ performer. He has brought
a great deal of success to his employer through this
approach and has also received a lot of personal
satisfaction and financial reward for his successes.
The Situation
Roger had recently been head-hunted
by a different organisation after being with the same
firm for some 10 years. Within the first two years with
his new employer he was not producing the same results
that he had become known for in his field. Roger had
offered a whole range of explanations for this all of
which had deflected responsibility away form his own
actions or behaviour and after conducting an analysis
with his managers about what was happening they could
not find any conclusive reasons for the problems being
experienced.
What’s the problem?
It then became apparent that Roger
had lost three key people from his team as a result of
resignations or requests for transfer. When this issue
was examined more closely it seemed to indicate that
Roger was experiencing some difficulty in adapting to
the organisational culture of his new employer who
placed great value on their managers being collaborative
and creative with colleagues.
What did Roger do?
Roger agreed to a feedback exercise
using the ECI and attended a number of
coaching sessions with a ScotCoach
accredited EI coach. To Roger’s amazement he discovered
that the same uncompromising approach that had been so
successful for him previously was now working against
him and that he needed to acquire some new approaches
and strengthen his competencies in managing his own
responses with colleagues and managing his working
relationships.
After some brief coaching input
Roger reported that he had gained some key insights into
his behaviour at work and realised that in his previous
job his behaviour had been tolerated or excused because
he was achieving results. However Roger now reports
experiencing improved results as he is better able to
capitalise on the talent of his team and adopt different
approaches when working with clients that has translated
into securing more contracts and opening up further
opportunities for his employer.
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Catherine
The situation
Catherine, Bill and John are all
team members working in a key policy area of a local
council. They all accused each other of bullying
behaviour and after submitting grievances against each
other they refused to work with each other until their
co-workers were reprimanded and/or removed to another
section.
What’s the problem?
Following an internal investigation
into all three grievances it was found that none of the
team members had been in breach of the organisation’s
policy on bullying but that clearly there were on-going
behavioural problems occurring and it was recommended
that these be addressed.
It was felt that it was not
operationally viable to split the team up as they had
each had specialist knowledge that was important to the
policy team function and so they needed to find a way to
assist these team members to identify what was happening
and prevent any further conflict from escalating out of
control.
ScotCoach conducted a
mediation
process with the team and as a result the team were able
to agree on a way forward. However it became apparent
that if the agreement was going to work and be
successful one member of the team needed to receive some
additional coaching input on aspects of her behaviour
and interactions.
What did Catherine do?
After completing the ECI Catherine
was able to identify that whilst she was highly
respected for her technical knowledge she lacked a
necessary level of
social awareness when
interacting with her other team members such that she
would not listen effectively and did not appreciate how
her actions were having a detrimental effect on the way
in which her team were able to deliver work on time. In
particular she realised that by being inflexible and
overly controlling or perfectionist about certain
aspects of the work she was not allowing the team to
work to its full capacity and this was then generating
further conflict between the other two members who would
disagree about how to cope with Catherine’s behaviour.
Following the brief
coaching
with Catherine she reported feeling supported by the ECI feedback process in that it provided her with a safe
and encouraging way in which she could come to terms
with the way in which her behaviour was affecting her
colleagues and allowed her to address these issues and
learn some practical new approaches for how to
collaborate more effectively with her co-workers.
You
may be interested in our
special offer for individual managers or
professionals to measure their Emotional Intelligence
and receive Feedback using the Emotional Competence
Inventory (ECI)
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